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Is Pickleball an Olympic Sport?

If you’ve caught the pickleball bug and wondered whether your favorite sport will ever make the Olympics, you’re not alone. The short answer: no, pickleball is not an Olympic sport. It won’t appear at the 2028 Los Angeles Games either. But the push to get it there is real, and things are moving faster than most people realize. Here’s where things actually stand.

Pickleball is not currently recognized by the International Olympic Committee. It was not part of the Paris 2024 Games, and the roster for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics has already been finalized without it.

Why It Missed

The LA28 organizing committee selected five optional sports for 2028: flag football, baseball/softball, cricket, lacrosse, and squash. Those choices were locked in back in 2023. Pickleball’s explosive growth happened so fast that the organizational side of the sport couldn’t keep pace with the proposal deadlines.

The Governance Problem

One of the biggest obstacles has been the lack of a single governing body. The IOC requires every Olympic sport to be overseen by one unified international federation. For years, pickleball had multiple competing pickleball organizations, including the International Pickleball Federation, the World Pickleball Federation, and the Global Pickleball Federation.

Progress is happening, though. In June 2025, the IPF and WPF officially merged. Shortly after, the GPF and the newly formed Unified World Pickleball Federation announced a joint task force aimed at full unification by mid-2026. That same month, a GPF delegation traveled to Lausanne, Switzerland to formally begin the IOC recognition process.

Getting into the Olympics isn’t just about popularity. The IOC has a strict checklist that every sport must satisfy before it can even be considered.

Here’s what pickleball needs:

  • The sport must be played by men in at least 75 countries across four continents
  • It must be played by women in at least 40 countries across three continents
  • A single recognized international federation must govern it worldwide
  • Full compliance with the World Anti-Doping Code is required
  • The sport needs an established international competitive structure

Where Pickleball Stands

The Global Pickleball Federation currently counts 76 member nations, which approaches but doesn’t yet clear the 75-country threshold for men’s participation. International growth is accelerating in places like India, Australia, the UK, Spain, and the Philippines, but Africa and South America remain underrepresented. The governance unification expected in 2026 would clear one of the tallest hurdles.

Yes, pickleball has the participation numbers to justify Olympic inclusion, but it hasn’t yet met the IOC’s specific geographic and organizational requirements. Around 36.5 million Americans have played at least once, participation grew over 300% between 2020 and 2024, and the sport is now played in more than 70 countries across six continents. The missing pieces are unified governance, anti-doping infrastructure, and deeper penetration in underrepresented regions.

The most realistic target for pickleball in the Olympics is the 2032 Brisbane Games. Some insiders think 2036 is more likely. Both timelines depend on how quickly the sport resolves its remaining organizational challenges.

Brisbane 2032

Australia already has a growing pickleball community, and under the IOC’s current rules, host cities can propose new sports for their specific Games. That’s the same mechanism that brought skateboarding and surfing into the Olympics. The Brisbane organizing committee is expected to make sport selection decisions in 2026, which creates real urgency for pickleball’s governing bodies to finalize their merger and submit a formal proposal.

The Demonstration Route

Historically, many sports entered the Olympics first as demonstration events. While the IOC has moved away from official demonstration sport labels, there’s talk of high-profile exhibition matches or side events at future Games. This could serve as a proving ground for pickleball before full medal status.

Pickleball’s case for Olympic inclusion gets stronger every year, and the numbers tell a compelling story.

  • Participation in the U.S. jumped 311% between 2021 and 2024
  • The global pickleball market hit $1.9 billion in 2025, projected to reach $4.4 billion by 2033
  • The average player age has dropped to 35, with the 25-34 age group now the largest segment
  • Over 82,000 courts exist across the U.S. alone, with thousands more being built

International Expansion

The sport is spreading well beyond North America. Canada reported 1.54 million participants in early 2025. Australia has over 90,000 players and nearly 270 clubs. India went from virtually zero infrastructure in 2016 to hosting the World Championship in 2024. The UK saw federation membership jump 73% in 2024. Spain now has more than 20,000 players. These numbers matter because the IOC cares about global reach, not just American enthusiasm.

So is pickleball an Olympic sport? Not yet. But it’s closer to that reality than at any point in the sport’s 60-year history. With governing bodies actively unifying, IOC conversations underway, and global participation climbing, the path to pickleball in the Olympics is starting to look less like a dream and more like a plan. Keep playing. The world is watching.

Will pickleball be in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics?

No. The LA28 committee finalized its sports program in 2023, selecting flag football, baseball/softball, cricket, lacrosse, and squash. Pickleball was not included, and the roster is set.

What is the earliest pickleball could appear in the Olympics?
Why isn’t pickleball already an Olympic sport?
How many countries play pickleball right now?
Could pickleball be a demonstration sport at a future Olympics?
  • IOC eligibility requires men in 75 countries across four continents, women in 40 across three. – Olympics.com
  • IOC will decide Brisbane 2032’s initial sports programme at a 2026 Session, guiding inclusion plans. – IOC Brisbane 2032
  • LA28 added baseball/softball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse, squash in 2023 to programme, highlighting host-driven additions. – IOC news

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